however, will be usually bland, but the opposite is also possible. For instance: ‘Fluent coryza with acrid, watery discharge’ (Bönning- hausen). Or: ‘Discharge of an acrid liquid, clear like water, from the nose’. Such cases have also been cured by Euphrasia! So, an overly rigid view of the keynote ‘eye discharge acrid, nasal discharge bland’ might lead to mistakes. If this keynote is present, Euphrasia is very probably indicated, but an acrid nasal catarrh will not contra-indicate Euphrasia.
Euphrasia patients have red eyes, burning and itching. The margins of the lids are especially swollen and red. In hay fever with this symptom and the keynote discussed above, Euphrasia will probably act curatively.
A sensation of a foreign body in the eye is also a frequent and intense symptom in Euphrasia cases; it may assume the form of a feeling of sand or dust in the eye, or a hair that seems to hang over the eye, compelling the patient to constantly wipe it. A very characteristic sensation is a feeling of dryness in the eyes, like the feeling of being very tired after spending a sleepless night. Or else: ‘Feeling as though the cornea were covered with much mucus’.
All these painful and disagreeable sensations tend to cause a strong inclination to blink which is further increased by the enormous photophobia of the remedy. The patient must often have the room darkened to be able to tolerate the eye complaints. The photophobia may increase so much that spasms of the eyelids occur. An interesting phenomenon in this context is that Euphrasia patients are reported to have often frightful dreams of fire and lightning. They frequently get nightmares, especially that there is fire or an electric storm, which wake them up in a fright. It seems that the idea of fire in the eyes (extremely acrid lachrymation) is transferred in the dreams. This is a remedy that startles easily, as from a fright.